Lucky Child, A: Memoir of Auschwitz

Lucky Child, A: Memoir of Auschwitz

Thomas Buergenthal
Our Price:  £3.99
List Price:  £12.85
Saving Of:  69%

Availability:  

  

In stock

Author:  Thomas Buergenthal
Condition:  Used, Like New
Format:  Paperback
Pages:  260
Publisher:  Back Ray Books
Year:  2015
ISBN:  9780316339186

Condition notes:
Unread but with small remainder mark to page block

Thomas Buergenthal is unique. Liberated from the death camps of Auschwitz at the age of eleven, in adulthood he became a judge at the International Court in The Hague. In his honest and heartfelt memoirs, he tells the story of his extraordinary journey - from the horrors of Nazism to an investigation of modern day genocide.

Aged ten Thomas Buergenthal arrived at Auschwitz after surviving the Ghetto of Kielce and two labour camps, and was soon separated from his parents. Using his wits and some remarkable strokes of luck, he managed to survive until he was liberated from Sachsenhausen in 1945. After experiencing the turmoil of Europe's post-war years - from the Battle of Berlin, to a Jewish orphanage in Poland - Buergenthal went to America in the 1950s at the age of seventeen. He eventually became one of the world's leading experts on international law and human rights. His story of survival and his determination to use law and justice to prevent further genocide is an epic and inspirational journey through twentieth century history. His book is both a special historical document and a great literary achievement, comparable only to Primo Levi's masterpieces.

You may also like
The lucky, lucky leaf: A Horace and Nim Story
David Hoskins
Condition: New
£6.99   £2.99

It's a windy autumn day and the forest friends are out catching falling leaves for luck. Nim wants to break his all-time record of five lucky leaves before tea time ...


Boy 30529: A Memoir
Felix Weinberg
Condition: New
£12.99   £4.99

Searing, frank memoir of childhood in the German concentration camps


Matters of Testimony: Interpreting the Scrolls of Auschwitz
Nicholas Chare, Dominic Williams
Condition: New
£24.95

In 1944, a number of Sonderkommando-"special squads" of Jewish prisoners who kept the gas chambers running smoothly-buried on the grounds of Auschwitz a series of remarkable eyewitness accounts. This study reconstructs their history and textual content, revealing literary works that raise troubling questions about the nature of testimony.